worry, on 08 September 2023 - 01:08 PM, said:
While I think his (standup & podcast) career has certainly been turbocharged by similar reactionary 'culture war' stuff as more recent things like Aldean and that other guy, that headline and article still feel like desperate clickbait to tie it all together as like a moment. Standup is stupidly popular generally on Netflix, and also their daily rankings thing is fake.
'I want to believe', but are there any good sources for those claims?
Some people might be mistaking their personalized 'Popular on Netflix' for Netflix's non-personalized viewership rankings. From 2021:
Quote
"Popular on Netflix" and "Trending," [...] are "actually personalized content that also happens to be popular." [...]
[...] the streamer uses what it calls a "chose to watch" standard, which tallies how many people sample at least two minutes of a given title. Netflix opted for this metric because it evens out disparities in program length and episode count.
Netflix's 'Top Ten' Most Popular Lists, Explained (vulture.com)
But they changed the metric this June:
Quote
Netflix Updates Top 10 Charts to Include Estimated Viewers in Addition to Hours Viewed
[...] estimated by taking the traditional hours viewed they have provided for some time and dividing by the show or film's total runtime. [...] window of measurement for the most popular lists for TV and film [is now] 91 days.
[...] Netflix's new way of calculating views isn't exactly perfect. [...] it assumes that every time a user watches a new piece of content, they make it all the way through every single time, which is ultimately inflating unique views. [...] it's more likely that some users are watching multiple times, while many never make it to the end the first time.
Netflix Updates Top 10 Charts to Include Estimated Viewers - Variety
From 2021:
Quote
Netflix released Dave Chappelle's latest stand-up special, The Closer. I don't have to tell you that it was the subject of lots of internet commentary, backlash and protest. So how did it do? Better than most other stand-up specials, though that's not saying much.
[...] this is the first time that a comedy special has made the Nielsen rankings. I double checked this a few times, and the math checks out.
Consider that Netflix themselves said that Kevin Hart's Zero F**ks Given was their most watched comedy special in 2020. Released on 17-Nov, it didn't make the Nielsen Top 10 list that week, meaning it had a viewership below 7.8 million hours. In other words, right around the range of Chappelle's special—which earned 6.7 million hours in its first week—and these two comics seem to deliver the most viewers for Netflix stand-up specials.
How Popular are Standup Specials on Netflix? Plus the End of "Manifest Summer" - Entertainment Strategy Guy
Granted, that last quote is from a blog post, and stand-up comedy could have surged in popularity since 2021, as the 'end' of the pandemic made life so much more depressing.... They could also be intentionally falsifying or manipulating the numbers to make certain things seem more popular, and they do have a vested interest in promoting things that are cheaper to produce ($200 million for a new movie vs... one person on stage with a microphone and an audience that actually
pays to be there?). But falsifying viewership numbers would be illegal, and heavily manipulating them to (intentionally) misleadingly promote certain material seems like it would at least be a huge scandal (and hit to their stock price...) if discovered....
This post has been edited by Azath Vitr (D'ivers: 08 September 2023 - 04:56 PM